2014
DOI: 10.5070/p2fw2s
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The Political History of Hydraulic Fracturing’s Expansion Across the West

Abstract: This article presents an historical-based analysis of how executive branch actions altered federal domestic energy policies and the effect of that shift on the Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) domestic energy policies and resource allocations. The analysis is supported by interview data collected from among Department of Interior officials who served during the Bush-Cheney administration as well as BLM administrators located in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico. The analysis and interviews were conducted at t… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Subsequent research has explored federalizing energy (Davis & Hoffer, ; Warner & Shapiro, ), land‐use conflicts (Forbis, ), community right‐to‐know regarding fracking chemical disclosure (Fisk, ; Heikkila, Weible, & Pierce, ), and state regulatory responses (Davis, ; Rinfret et al, ). Forbis () clearly identifies the land‐use conflict among ranchers, industry, environmental groups, and state and federal regulators over the rapid expansion of hydraulic fracturing on split‐estate and public lands. Gullion () examines how “reluctant activists” working to pass restrictive city ordinances are responding to natural gas development in their communities by defining it as a threat to community health and cause of disease.…”
Section: Framing Natural Gas: Economy Versus Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Subsequent research has explored federalizing energy (Davis & Hoffer, ; Warner & Shapiro, ), land‐use conflicts (Forbis, ), community right‐to‐know regarding fracking chemical disclosure (Fisk, ; Heikkila, Weible, & Pierce, ), and state regulatory responses (Davis, ; Rinfret et al, ). Forbis () clearly identifies the land‐use conflict among ranchers, industry, environmental groups, and state and federal regulators over the rapid expansion of hydraulic fracturing on split‐estate and public lands. Gullion () examines how “reluctant activists” working to pass restrictive city ordinances are responding to natural gas development in their communities by defining it as a threat to community health and cause of disease.…”
Section: Framing Natural Gas: Economy Versus Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Modern hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling technologies can be traced back to the 1980s and their widespread application coupled with abundant resources and amenable federal and state policies drive this Rocky Mountain West natural gas boom (Davis & Kear, ; Forbis, ; Kear, forthcoming). Notably, the western boom precedes other unconventional shale gas booms including the Marcellus Shale (Appalachians) that began in the late 2000s; the popularization of fracking in the media as an energy wedge issue; and the more recent (post‐2010) contentious debate between municipalities and states over the legality of local fracking bans and moratoriums (Davis, ).…”
Section: Framing Natural Gas: Economy Versus Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much has been written about the use of energy as a political weapon [99–103]. In the USA the goal of energy security and energy independence has been pivotal to their energy policy [104, 105, p. 160, 106]. Therefore, this paper puts forward the argument that if distributed dc voltage systems were used to gain energy independence across the whole world, the geopolitical situation across the world may be in a much better position.…”
Section: Uns’ Sustainable Development Goalsmentioning
confidence: 99%